A ton of top-tier college football prospects will be in Tallahassee over the next few days.

And the reigning national champions are not going to take it easy on the players.

In its fifth year, the Jimbo Fisher Football Camp begins its July session on Wednesday, and some of the country's most highly-touted high school football players are expected to be in attendance.

Throughout the three-day camp, players will experience the same in-your-face approach that helped lead Florida State to its third national championship.

"It's insane to look at the list of guys that they expect to make it in," said 247Sports.com recruiting analyst Chris Nee. "You can win a lot of football games with guys on that list."

While there will likely be more than 400 campers at FSU's practice facility over the next three days, Nee expects 60-80 of those players to be FSU prospects.

As the Seminoles look to add another quarterback to their 2015 class, Bradenton IMG Academy's Deondre Francois and Kai Locksley of Baltimore, Maryland, are the program's top two targets. The pair of four-star talents are both expected to be at camp this week.

Five-star defensive end Josh Sweat, who some recruiting analysts believe is the top player in the nation, is also among the elite recruits that will be on the FSU campus.

"Whether you're a prospect or not a prospect, we teach everybody the same and want to make them better," said Fisher, who is entering his fifth season as head coach of the Seminoles. "We coach them just like we coach our players. We coach them hard and we put them through the same drills."

In addition to FSU's national championship staff, which commands attention with their approach – a mix of detailed teaching and yelling – the campers will also be coached by players from the Seminoles' title team.

"I think FSU does a very good job of treating their camp almost like a practice," Nee said. "It's very much about instruction, teaching guys and putting guys through the gamut of the different things they're going to do.

"Some schools it's a little bit more about seeing how good of an athlete a kid is by running the 40 (yard dash), doing some agility (drills) and then doing some one-on-one (work). There's a little less instruction and more just seeing how they are with pure athletic ability."

As the Seminoles look to build on the 13 signees they already have for their 2015 class, the camp will also be loaded with top-talent for 2016 and 2017.

Over the next few days, the prospects and the FSU coaches will be able to build on their relationships, while also seeing how they work together on the field.

For the hundreds of campers that are not prospects, they will have an opportunity to learn from some of the best players and coaches in college football.

"The camp has grown each year," said Fisher, even though about half of his current team attended the camp at some point. "It's gotten bigger and bigger. I think that when you do a good job and they see that it's not a recruiting camp, that it is about every player that's here, I think it makes folks want (to come).

"Because if it's my son, I'd want him coached and I'd want him to get better. Sometimes with these guys, it's some of the best instruction they can have."